But then where did that god come from? He must've appeared out of nowhere. Or has he always existed in which case there was no beginning? That sounds just as weird as there being a beginning. But all this is us just engaging in stoner talk. What does the actual evidence point to? The universe beginning 13.8 billion years ago in a Big Bang.
Some real stoner talk, what if our universe is just like a cell of something really huge, like 99% of a cell is empty and most of space is empty, and it's almost like a kaleidoscope of realities based on size, sort of like a fractal
We've already found the smallest particles "proven" to exist, supposedly, and we see an indirect correlation between the micro and macro worlds, and we start with like the first, second, and third dimension, which we are in, which a flat line to a circle to a sphere implies broadening perception (or stepping back for a bigger view, or increasing size)
And like the plants that absorb sunlight and produce nutrients for living entities to ingest and absorb, there might be some intrinsic design to life at this scale influencing/impacting a reality on a scale that makes our universe seem infinitesimal
And physics for example and the Fibonacci sequence and other like sacred geometry type things, at the quantum level observation/assessment/acknowledgement of things can decide certain things (like the double slit experiment) and while I don't believe in a traditional God, I could believe there's some force perhaps (like mother nature, but not a sentient being more like "path of least resistance" protocol woven into the fabric of reality as it was born [big bang]) that controls or observes possibly all scales of existence, even like the atoms that make up a rock, something is measured somewhere (and not just in our human minds) that determines if a smashed rock will crumble or not
Disagree. The processes at work in the universe are well understood and we can track the history of the universe back to a 'big bang' - at which point our scientific models break down, I'll admit.
IIN to hate religion?
← View full post
The universe magically appearing out of nowhere is a lot less likely than there being a god.
--
JellyBeanBandit
2 years ago
|
pl
Comment Hidden (
show
)
Report
1
1
-
dirk
2 years ago
|
pl
Comment Hidden (
show
)
Report
0
0
But then where did that god come from? He must've appeared out of nowhere. Or has he always existed in which case there was no beginning? That sounds just as weird as there being a beginning. But all this is us just engaging in stoner talk. What does the actual evidence point to? The universe beginning 13.8 billion years ago in a Big Bang.
--
[Old Memory]
2 years ago
|
pl
Comment Hidden (
show
)
Report
0
0
Some real stoner talk, what if our universe is just like a cell of something really huge, like 99% of a cell is empty and most of space is empty, and it's almost like a kaleidoscope of realities based on size, sort of like a fractal
We've already found the smallest particles "proven" to exist, supposedly, and we see an indirect correlation between the micro and macro worlds, and we start with like the first, second, and third dimension, which we are in, which a flat line to a circle to a sphere implies broadening perception (or stepping back for a bigger view, or increasing size)
And like the plants that absorb sunlight and produce nutrients for living entities to ingest and absorb, there might be some intrinsic design to life at this scale influencing/impacting a reality on a scale that makes our universe seem infinitesimal
And physics for example and the Fibonacci sequence and other like sacred geometry type things, at the quantum level observation/assessment/acknowledgement of things can decide certain things (like the double slit experiment) and while I don't believe in a traditional God, I could believe there's some force perhaps (like mother nature, but not a sentient being more like "path of least resistance" protocol woven into the fabric of reality as it was born [big bang]) that controls or observes possibly all scales of existence, even like the atoms that make up a rock, something is measured somewhere (and not just in our human minds) that determines if a smashed rock will crumble or not
Disagree. The processes at work in the universe are well understood and we can track the history of the universe back to a 'big bang' - at which point our scientific models break down, I'll admit.
--
SmokeEverything
2 years ago
|
pl
Comment Hidden (
show
)
Report
1
1
Nah, all that stuff is completely theoretical. Science has turned into another religion.